
Beaumont summers push past 100 degrees and the San Gorgonio Pass wind is relentless. A properly built patio cover brings your backyard back to life, and we engineer every one for this specific climate.

Covered decks and patio covers in Beaumont are permanent roof-like structures built over your outdoor living space to block the sun, light rain, and wind-driven debris. Most projects take three days to two weeks of active construction, with permit review adding one to three weeks before work begins.
If your backyard is simply too hot to use from May through September, a covered structure can make it genuinely comfortable again. Homeowners who want bug protection alongside shade often combine this work with screened-in porches and screened decks for a fully enclosed outdoor room. For a more open-air look that still provides shade, some homeowners prefer pergola installation as an alternative.
We work throughout Beaumont and the broader Inland Empire, and we handle permits and HOA submissions as a standard part of every project.
If you walk outside between May and October and immediately head back in because of the heat, your outdoor space is not working for you. Beaumont's summer temperatures regularly push past 100 degrees, and without shade, a patio becomes uncomfortable within minutes.
If you live in an exposed part of Beaumont, you have probably seen what the pass wind does to lightweight patio furniture. A solid patio cover with wind-rated posts can make the difference between a space you use and one you avoid.
Many Beaumont homes were built with a concrete slab but nothing overhead. Direct sun exposure causes slabs to fade and stain faster than they should. A cover protects the surface and extends its life, reducing future concrete costs.
If your current cover moves when you push on it, has visible rust on the frame, or has soft or discolored wood, it may be near the end of its useful life. Replacing it now avoids a last-minute scramble when you go to sell.
Most patio covers we build in Beaumont are attached to the house, which creates a seamless extension of your home. Freestanding covers are also an option for homeowners who want a covered area away from the main structure. The choice between solid roof and open-lattice comes down to how much direct sun you want to block - a solid roof gives you full shade and can handle light rain, while a lattice lets in filtered light and a breeze. Homeowners who want to go a step further and enclose the space entirely can add a screen enclosure through our screened-in porches and screened decks service, or frame out a more decorative open structure with pergola installation.
Electrical options - ceiling fans, recessed lights, or outdoor speakers - can be added at the time of construction and require coordination with a licensed electrician. We handle the structural work and framing; the electrical rough-in happens in parallel. All structures are built on concrete footings set to the depth required by Beaumont's wind load conditions, which are more demanding than most inland California locations.
Best for homeowners who want a low-maintenance, rust-proof cover that holds up to Beaumont's heat and wind with minimal upkeep.
Best for homeowners who want a traditional look and are prepared to maintain the wood with periodic sealing against UV and heat.
Best for homeowners who want partial shade and natural light while still having overhead structure that defines the outdoor space.
Best for homeowners who want a covered area separate from the house, such as over a standalone seating area or outdoor kitchen.
Beaumont sits at roughly 2,600 feet in the San Gorgonio Pass, where summer temperatures regularly exceed 100 degrees and the sun hits harder than at sea level. That UV intensity breaks down cheaper cover materials faster here than homeowners expect - paint fades, wood cracks, and aluminum with low-grade finishes deteriorates in just a few seasons. Material choice is genuinely consequential in this climate, and a contractor who has not worked in the Inland Empire may not account for that. Homeowners in Yucaipa and Redlands face similar conditions and often choose the same aluminum or solid-roof wood options that hold up best over time.
The wind through the pass adds another layer of complexity. A patio cover that is not anchored with properly engineered footings can shift, wobble, or fail during a strong gust. Beaumont's building department actively enforces permit requirements for this reason - the inspection process exists to make sure the structure is safe, not just aesthetically finished. Many of Beaumont's planned communities, including Four Seasons, Tournament Hills, and Sundance, also require HOA approval before construction begins. We handle all of it - permits, HOA submissions, and footing depths engineered for this specific wind corridor.
The North American Deck and Railing Association publishes standards for outdoor covered structures. You can verify any contractor's California license through the California Contractors State License Board.
We visit your home, measure the space, and look at how your house is built where the cover would attach. You get a written quote covering materials, labor, and the permit. We reply within one business day of your first call.
Once you agree on scope and price, we submit the city permit application and any HOA documentation needed for your community. Beaumont permit review typically takes one to three weeks - we keep you updated so there are no surprises.
After permit approval, we order materials and put you on the construction schedule. Most projects are scheduled within one to two weeks of permit approval. We confirm the start date with you in advance.
The crew sets footings, raises posts and beams, and finishes the roof structure - most standard covers are complete in two to five days. After the city inspection passes, we walk you through the finished structure and answer any questions.
No obligation. We come to your home, measure the space, and give you a written estimate. Most homeowners hear back within one business day of reaching out.
(951) 574-0539Patio covers in the San Gorgonio Pass need deeper, stronger footings than most other Inland Empire locations. We size and pour every footing to handle Beaumont's specific wind conditions - not the lighter specs appropriate for calmer neighborhoods. Posts that shift or wobble in the first wind event are a sign the footings were undersized.
Beaumont's triple-digit summers and intense UV exposure eliminate some cover materials as practical options and make others the clear right choice. We walk every homeowner through the real-world performance difference between aluminum, wood, and vinyl in this specific climate before a material decision is made.
The City of Beaumont Building and Safety Division actively enforces permit requirements for patio covers. We pull the permit, coordinate the inspection, and handle HOA design review paperwork for homes in planned communities. You do not have to interact with city offices or your HOA board.
Every project starts with a written, itemized quote. You know what you are getting, what it costs, and what would trigger any change in price before we pick up a tool. There are no surprise add-ons at the end of the job.
A patio cover in Beaumont needs to survive the heat, hold up in the wind, and be documented correctly for resale. Those are the three things we make sure every project gets right before we call the job done.
Open-beam pergolas provide shade and architectural interest without the full weatherproofing of a solid-roof cover.
Learn MoreCombine a covered roof with screen enclosure panels to get shade, rain protection, and bug protection in one structure.
Learn MoreBeaumont's permit process takes time - the sooner you reach out, the sooner you are sitting under your new cover. Call or request a free estimate today.